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catdaddyp

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Posts posted by catdaddyp

  1. Here are some Game Day notes. I’ve also added them to the bottom of the original post.


     

    Kitna has already thrown for 551 yards while completing 72% of his passes. However, he’s shown to be mistake-prone under pressure, tossing two interceptions so far.

     

    The Blazers will rotate at running back with UTEP transfer Jackson and top backup Beebe handling most of the workload. Jackson is a dangerous runner who can break one at any time, while Beebe is just as likely to catch a pass as he is to carry the ball.

     

    Milliner is UAB’s most explosive wideout, and Hooks has been Kitna’s second-favorite target.

     

    UAB has stuck with the same five starters through both games, not rotating a single lineman. It’s a rebuilt OL and they’ve surprisingly been a strong unit so far—giving up only one sack and 6 pressures. Going left to right:

    Sneh -  6’5”315 (Kansas State)

    Perez - 6’5” 315 (Duke)

    Lepkowski -  6’3” 300

    Morgan - 6’4”320 (South Carolina)

    Moore - 6’8” 290

     

    The Blazers’ defense has struggled to stop anyone this season, but a few players have stood out with consistent play. Interestingly, both starting defensive tackles—Smalls and Sam Houston transfer Warren—have been really good. At linebacker, Rhode Island transfer Hightower has been effective, while in the secondary Boston College transfer safety Cheek and Pittsburgh transfer cornerback Crumpley have been the top performers.

     

    UAB has only punted once this season—a 39-yarder downed inside the twenty. All extra points have been converted, and field goals are 2-for-3, with the lone miss coming from the 30–39 yard range. The two makes, however, have both been from beyond 40 yards.

     

    During Dilfer’s press conference, a reporter referred to this as a “get right game” for UAB. Dilfer laughed and said the Blazers are usually the get right game for their opponents, adding that he hopes Akron’s offense doesn’t get going this weekend.

     

     

    Some notes about the Zips:

     

    JUCO transfer right tackle Maasai King has graded out really well through the first two games, especially in pass protection according to PFF. Next is right guard Keylen Davis, who has been solid but noticeably stronger in run blocking.

     

    Keep an eye on JUCO transfer defensive tackle Nehemiah Musika in goal line situations. He was also mentioned on the Zips Weekly show. Musika was a commitment I really liked, though I wasn’t quite sure how we managed to land him. He supposedly isn’t as tall as listed and is still working into shape after being a late arrival due to coursework. Once Musika is able to play more regularly, he should give us a strong rotation with Laventure and Hull at DT—barring injury.

     

    Former Illinois transfer Shammond Cooper has been playing at a high level and also leads the team in tackles with 19 total.

     

    I’ve mentioned this a few times already, but DeWalt and Reed have really stepped up at cornerback. Reed in particular has been impressive—allowing just 19 yards on four receptions while being targeted 10 times. They’ll need another strong outing today if we’re going to have a chance at slowing down UAB’s offense.

     

     

    • Like 2
  2. 4 hours ago, Blue & Gold said:

    JoeMo's needed a QB who is a dual threat. DJ Irons doesn't count as he was an Arth recruit, so it's on Year 4 JoeMo he hasn't been able to land one in the TP.

     

    Four years ago I was over the moon with us landing JoeMo... but it did cause me to raise an eyebrow when he wasn't even able to lure a 5th string walk-on Oregon QB to Akron with him.

     

    This sucks.

    We're demoralized.

    I do believe that JoeMo is done - though he's got another year on his contract.

    I'm more upset about losing the posts of Catdaddy than I am about losing the offense of JoeMo.

    Thanks for the kind words. Don’t worry, I’m not going anywhere regardless of Moorhead’s status. Sure, Moorhead coming to Akron and my family’s move to Ohio may have sparked my initial interest, but now I’m in it for the long haul. My kids look forward to going to an Akron game with me every year, and I’d be thrilled if any of them ended up attending Akron someday. It’s also been a pleasure meeting some of the posters here in person.

     

    I’m going to go on a bit of a rant here with my disappointment on how things have gone since Moorhead took over. 

     

    Like I’ve said before, there are certain turnarounds in college football I really enjoy following. The two other programs I’ve kept an eye on are South Carolina and Illinois. Forget for a moment that they’re P4 and Akron is G5—the similarities are still there. All three were sitting in the bottom third of their conferences when their current head coaches took over. None of them are near the top of their conferences in NIL money. And the general consensus from the media and most college football fans was that it was impossible to win at those schools. Fast forward a few years, and two of the three are sitting in the top 11 nationally, depending on which poll you look at.

     

    All three schools have also assembled excellent staffs. Just the other day I was talking with a colleague who played at Bowling Green and later coached at Syracuse. We got on the topic of MAC football, and unprompted he mentioned what a great staff Moorhead has put together at Akron with limited funds. I had to agree.

     

    The flip side is recruiting. Because without great players, it really doesn’t matter how good the coaching is—wins will always be hard to come by. I’ve coached for well over a decade and also worked on the recruiting services side of things. From my perspective, Moorhead has brought in a lot of talent, but it just hasn’t translated into wins yet. Recruiting services will disagree, but here’s some context: most analysts have little to no football background—they’re writers. They put too much stock into measurables and camp performances without pads. On top of that, programs with long track records of success almost always get the benefit of the doubt with rankings. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve seen a kid commit to South Carolina as a two- or three-star, only to decommit, flip to Georgia or Alabama, and suddenly get bumped to four stars. Same story with Illinois versus Michigan or Ohio State.

     

    I say all this because Akron football seemingly has what it needs in place to win right now—and just isn’t. I can’t explain why the offense looked like year one with a brand-new staff when this is year four with a returning starting quarterback who has the physical tools to make just about every throw at this level. I don’t have an issue with Moorhead being open about what the program is lacking financially. What I do have an issue with is the lack of wins despite a dramatically upgraded roster compared to when he took over and a really strong staff in place.

     

    All that said, I’m still hoping this week is the spark that finally gets the long-awaited wins rolling—and that I look foolish for even posting this. It’s past time.

     

    • Like 8
  3. This will probably be my shortest postgame take of the year.

     

    QB:

    Finley was under pressure most of the night, outside of just a handful of snaps. He tried to hang in the pocket and deliver some throws. The problem was his receivers, who were credited with eight—yes, eight—drops. The silver lining is that some of the staple throws he hit consistently last year were on target again in this game.

     

    RB:

    Patrick and Gant took advantage of their chances whenever they weren’t being met in the backfield right away. I’m genuinely excited about what this duo can bring the rest of the season.

     

    WR:

    Just a brutal showing from this group. They did the work to get open but too often failed to finish the play. Not every throw is going to be perfect, but receivers can’t afford to drop the ones that hit them in the hands. There’s simply too much talent in this room to put out the kind of performance we saw last night.

     

    TE: 

    Cravaack was on the field for every tight end snap but spent most of the night being used as a blocker. It was a tough outing overall, and it’s clear Newell has been missed.

     

    OL:

    I don’t know the exact size, weight, or length differences between the two sides of the line, but we looked clearly outmatched in those areas. Our OL not only seemed physically undersized against Nebraska’s front, but we were also slow on pulls and often whiffed on the oncoming defender. On top of that, there were moments where we looked completely confused about assignments or couldn’t hold blocks long enough for the play to develop. The second half against Nebraska’s backups went better for obvious reasons.

     

    DL:

    The defensive line held its own for parts of the game but wore down as things went on. We weren’t able to generate much pressure in the first half, though once the game was out of reach, we did manage to flush or get to the quarterback a few times. The short-yardage stands we came up with, similar to last week, are a positive sign and bode well for this group moving forward.

     

    LB:

    The secondary falls into this category as well—we had some run fits break down and a few busted coverages. The linebackers struggled at times to shed blocks, and against a team like Nebraska, that’s going to lead to big plays. Tackling, once again, was solid early but slipped as the game wore on.

     

    DB:

    I thought Reed and DeWalt held their own throughout the game. The rest of the secondary, though, consistently had a tough time against an offense loaded with playmakers and a scheme that kept putting us in difficult situations.

     

    ST:

    When it rains, it pours. We had a blocked field goal, a missed field goal that drilled the upright, and an eleven-yard punt. If there are any positive takeaways here, it’s that Hills looks like a returner who has the ability to take one to the house against lesser competition.

     

    Coaching:

    No, we don’t have the horses to keep up with Nebraska. That said, going two straight weeks without a point—with an offense in its fourth year and the most overall talent at the skill spots since Moorhead arrived—is flat-out unacceptable. Defensively, Nebraska took advantage of any defender even slightly out of position. Once the depth rotations started, things were bound to get ugly. Just one guy out of place was enough to give up a big play, and it happened too often.

     

     

    I know everyone wanted to see a better showing—myself included—but at the end of the day, this was a payday game and doesn’t mean much beyond another loss. Even with the lopsided score, we seemingly walked away without injuries and can now shift our focus to a winnable matchup next week. Hopefully, the staff can use the film to teach some lessons on busts, leverage, and the like, but outside of that, this one can be flushed.

     

     

    QB:

    Finley

    M. Johnson

     

    RB:

    Patrick

    Gant

    Marq. Williams

     

    WR:

    M. Williams

    Grear

     

    WR:

    Walker

    Mason

    Louis

     

    WR:

    Polk

    Monteiro

    Hills

     

    TE:

    Cravaack 

     

    LT:

    Motley-Simmons

    J. Moore

     

    LG:

    McManus

    Archer

     

    C

    Lyons

    Morris 

     

    RG:

    A. Jones

    K. Davis

     

    RT:

    King

    Mann

     

     

    DE:

    Durham

    D. Frazier

     

    DE:

    Dall

    J. Frazier

    Murphy

     

    DT:

    Laventure 

    Mixon

    Duncan

     

    DT:

    Hull

    Murphy

    Musika 

    E. Davis

     

    LB:

    Cooper

    Spriggs

    Boswell

     

    LB:

    Summers

    Hocker

    Benenge

     

    NB:

    AL. Branch

    Stepney

    AA. Branch

     

    CB:

    Reed

    Kamara

     

    CB:

    DeWalt

    Jarmon

     

    S:

    Anderson

    Hunter

     

    S:

    DiMarco 

    AL. Branch

     

     

    KO:

    Wiley

     

    K:

    Wiley

     

    P:

    Castle

    B. Johnson 

     

     

     

    Top Rated Offense (20 snap minimum):

    (QB) Finley

    (RT) King

    (HB) Patrick

    (C) Lyons

    (RG) K. Davis

     

    Top Rated Defense (20 snap minimum):

    (CB) Reed

    (LB) Cooper

    (CB) DeWalt

    (NB) AA. Branch

    (DT) Musika

     

    • Like 1
  4. 11 minutes ago, ZippyDoo said:

    where did u get that depth chart from?  i'd like to visit that site. PFF had mcmanus the highest rated player for the team. 

     

    PFF had the defensive line at:

     

    Dall 69.4

    Hull 57.8

    Laventure 65.3

    Durham 54.5

    mixon 67.1

    murphy 62.2

    Cheatom 80.2

    d frazier 59.4

    j frazier 38.6

    duncan 49.9

     

     

     

    I created the depth chart myself by using PFF and what I saw during the game. Although, I only listed a player in one position. For example, even though M. Johnson played multiple positions on offense, I only listed him once.
     

    PFF isn’t always correct in their ratings or positions played, but it’s the best resource I know of, especially when I’ve made the decision to not go back and rewatch the game. 
     

    Patrick ended up being the highest rated player on offense with Summers the highest rated on defense. PFF will go back in and revise their ratings later in the week.

  5. 11 hours ago, Lee Adams said:

    Respectfully your position advantages don't seem realistic given what we have seen.You may call it a must win. But that seems meaningless until they actually win a so called must win. We have had plenty of those.

    Keep in mind, all of this was done in the preseason. I’m also not sure how much we actually learned in a loss to a G5 team compared to what UAB did against an FCS. If we’re looking at Week 1 in a vacuum and treating Alabama State and Wyoming as equals, then give UAB the edge in all the offensive spots and Akron the edge in the defensive ones. Special teams would go Akron’s way too.

     

    Teams rarely look the same in Week 2, but unfortunately for us, we’ll probably still be staring at an ugly score against a team with superior resources and talent. Week 3 against UAB will be a better barometer for this team.

    • Like 4
  6. Wyoming (2-3)

    Week 1:  Win 10-0 at Akron (2-4)

    Week 2: Win 31-7 vs Northern Iowa (2-3)

    Week 3: Loss 31-6 vs Utah (4-1)

    Week 4: Loss 37-20 at Colorado (2-4)

    Week 5: BYE

    Week 6: Loss 31-17 vs UNLV (5-0)

    Week 7: vs San Jose State (2-3)

     

    Nebraska (4-1)

    Week 1: Win 20-17 vs Cincinnati (4-1)

    Week 2: Win 68-0 vs Akron (2-4)

    Week 3: Win 59-7 vs Houston Christian (1-4)

    Week 4: Loss 30-27 vs Michigan (4-1)

    Week 5: BYE

    Week 6: Win 38-27 vs Michigan State (3-2)

    Week 7: at Maryland (4-1)

     

    UAB (2-3)

    Week 1: Win 52-42 vs Alabama State (4-1)

    Week 2: Loss 38-24 at Navy (5-0)

    Week 3: Win 31-28 vs Akron (2-4)

    Week 4: Loss 56-24 at Tennessee (4-1)

    Week 5: BYE

    Week 6: Loss 31-13 vs Army (2-3)

    Week 7: at FAU (2-3)

     

    Duquesne (3-3)

    Week 1: Loss 61-9 at Pittsburgh (3-2)

    Week 2: Win 55-14 vs Lincoln (0-5)

    Week 3: Loss 35-21 vs Lehigh (6-0)

    Week 4: Loss 51-7 at Akron (2-4)

    Week 5: Win 44-18 vs New Haven (3-3)

    Week 6: Win 34-14 vs Stonehill (2-4)

    Week 7: vs St. Francis (0-5)

     

    Toledo (3-2) (1-1 MAC)

    Week 1: Loss 24-16 at Kentucky (2-3)

    Week 2: Win 45-21 vs Western Kentucky (5-1)

    Week 3: Win 60–0 vs Morgan State (2-4)

    Week 4: Loss 14-13 at Western Michigan (3-3)

    Week 5: Win 45-3 vs Akron (2-4)

    Week 6: BYE

    Week 7: at Bowling Green (2-3)

     

    Central Michigan (3-3) (1-1 MAC)

    Week 1: Win 16-14 at San Jose State (2-3)

    Week 2: Loss 45-17 at Pittsburgh (3-2)

    Week 3: Loss 63-3 at Michigan (4-1)

    Week 4: Win 49-10 vs Wagner (1-4)

    Week 5: Win 24-13 vs Eastern Michigan (1-5)

    Week 6: Loss 28-22 at Akron (2-4)

    Week 7: BYE

     

    Miami (2-3) (1-0 MAC)

    Week 1: Loss 17-0 at Wisconsin (2-3)

    Week 2: Loss 45-17 at Rutgers (3-2)

    Week 3: BYE

    Week 4: Loss 41-38 vs UNLV (5-0)

    Week 5: Win 38-0 vs Lindenwood (3-3)

    Week 6: Win 25-14 at Northern Illinois (1-4)

    Week 7: at Akron (2-4)

     

    Ball State (2-3) (1-0 MAC)

    Week 1: Loss 31-0 at Purdue (2-3)

    Week 2: Loss 42-3 at Auburn (3-2)

    Week 3: Win 34-29 vs New Hampshire (3-3)

    Week 4: Loss 31-25 at UCONN (4-2)

    Week 5: BYE

    Week 6: Win 20-14 vs Ohio (3-3)

    Week 7: at Western Michigan (3-3)

     

    Buffalo (3-3) (2-0 MAC)

    Week 1: Loss 23-10 at Minnesota (3-2)

    Week 2: Win 45-6 vs St. Francis (0-5)

    Week 3: Win 31-28 at Kent State (1-4)

    Week 4: Loss 21-17 vs Troy (3-2)

    Week 5: Loss 20-17 vs UCONN (4-2)

    Week 6: Win 31-30 vs Eastern Michigan (1-5)

    Week 7: at UMASS (0-5)

     

    UMASS (0-5) (0-1 MAC)

    Week 1: Loss 42-10 vs Temple (3-2)

    Week 2: Loss 27-26 vs Bryant (2-4)

    Week 3: Loss 47-7 at Iowa (3-2)

    Week 4: BYE

    Week 5: Loss 42-6 at Missouri (5-0)

    Week 6: Loss 21-3 vs Western Michigan (3-3)

    Week 7: vs Buffalo (3-3)

     

    Kent State (1-4) (0-1 MAC)

    Week 1: Win 21-17 vs Merrimack (3-3)

    Week 2: Loss 62-14 at Texas Tech (5-0)

    Week 3: Loss 31-28 vs Buffalo (3-3)

    Week 4: Loss 66-10 at Florida State (3-2)

    Week 5: BYE

    Week 6: Loss 44-0 at Oklahoma (5-0)

    Week 7: vs UMASS (0-5)

     

    Bowling Green (2-3) (0-1 MAC)

    Week 1: Win 26-7 vs Lafayette (4-2)

    Week 2: Loss 34-20 at Cincinnati (4-1)

    Week 3: Win 23-13 vs Liberty (1-4)

    Week 4: Loss 40-17 at Louisville (4-1)

    Week 5: Loss 35-20 at Ohio (3-3)

    Week 6: BYE

    Week 7: vs Toledo (3-2)

     

    • Thanks 1
  7. 5 hours ago, Blue & Gold said:

    Still numb from Thursday night.

     

    As LZIp mentioned above, I loved what I saw out of Patrick and White before they went out with injury.

    Hopefully our D is truly stout & it wasn't simply an inept Wyoming offense we were witnessing.

     

    Without saying both, would you guys pin Finley's troubles primarily on Finley, or was our OL to blame?  I was fully expecting Finley to light it up this season 😞

    Off the top of my head, I remember our center completely whiffing on a defensive lineman twice—pretty sure both were by Lyons. I also don’t blame Finley for the 3rd and longs when Wyoming brought more than we could block. In those situations, the best-case scenario is usually a short completion where the receiver picks up some YAC. Outside of that, it just wasn’t a good day for our QB1. I kept waiting for him to get hot—he can be a streaky player at times—but it never happened.

     

    According to PFF, Wyoming blitzed 14 times, and Finley went 6 of 14 on those plays. Out of his 38 total attempts, he was supposedly kept clean on 24 of them. The brutal part is he only completed 11 passes for 93 yards in those clean pockets and even threw an interception. That won’t cut it against anyone on our schedule. For what it’s worth, PFF graded the OL fairly well overall, with the exception of both centers.

     

    Also of note, looks like they went through and updated some stats. True freshman Kenneth McManus was our highest rated lineman and 2nd highest rated player on offense.

     

    • Like 2
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